J. Mater. Sci. Technol. ›› 2023, Vol. 164: 229-239.DOI: 10.1016/j.jmst.2023.04.069

• Research Article • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Synthesis and formation mechanism of HfB2 ultrafine powders with low oxygen via flocculating settling assisted process and carbo/borothermal reduction

Zhen Wanga,b, Yuan Chengd, Kewei Lia,b, Tianxu Wangb,c, Mengen Hua,b, Chunxue Zhenga,b, Xinyang Lib, Zhulin Huanga,b,*, Xiaoye Hua,b,*, Yue Lia,b,*, Xinghong Zhangd,**   

  1. aUniversity of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China
    bKey Laboratory of Materials Physics and Anhui Key Laboratory of Nanomaterials and Nanotechnology, Institute of Solid State Physics, HFIPS, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hefei 230031, China
    cAnhui University, Hefei 230039, China d Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150001, China
  • Received:2022-11-30 Revised:2023-04-12 Accepted:2023-04-28 Published:2023-11-20 Online:2023-11-15
  • Contact: *University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China.
    **E-mail addresses: zlhuang@issp.ac.cn (Z. Huang), hxy821982@issp.ac.cn (X. Hu), yueli@issp.ac.cn (Y. Li), zhangxh@hit.edu.cn (X. Zhang).

Abstract: In this study, ultrafine HfB2 powders with low oxygen were synthesized by a flocculating settling process which yielded ceramic precursors and subsequent carbo/borothermal reduction of the precursors. The liquid phase precursor method can achieve uniform mixing of components at the molecular level through multiple complexation reactions, and then realize the carbo/borothermal reduction reaction at a lower temperature to obtain ultrapure HfB2 powders. The as-resulted quasi-spherical HfB2 powders under the optimum conditions (atomic molar ratio M:B:C = 1:2.8:10) calcined at 1500 °C for 1 h have an average particle size of 205 nm and an oxygen content of 0.097 wt.%. Detailed analysis of the phase evolution of precursors shows that the formation of HfB2 particles is a mass diffusion mode from the external to internal HfO2 cores. We reveal that below 1300 °C, HfC is not an intermediate product of HfB2 powder during the transition of precursors. Instead, HfC was formed as a by-product at high temperatures in the carbo/borothermal reduction process. The proposed formation mechanism of HfB2 is completely different from the traditional two-step transformation method. After the sintering of the ultrafine powders, the HfB2 ceramics show a relative density of 96.1% and superior mechanical properties compared to other works. Furthermore, by simply replacing the initial metal source, chlorinated group IV and V transitional metals (Ti, Zr, Ta, Nb) can also convert into high-purity and ultrafine diborides. This work shows that flocculating settling assisted carbo/borothermal reduction has potential in lot size production of various high-purity and ultrafine boride powders.

Key words: Boride powders, Flocculating settling, Low oxygen content, High-purity